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The One Way To God Jesus CHOICES heretic4jesus Homepage
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Viewed as chatha', "coming short of our true end," the glory of God (Rom 3:23), literally, missing the mark as in shooting an arrow at a target; Greek hamartanoo (NT:264). (from Fausset's Bible Dictionary, Electronic Database Copyright (c)1998 by Biblesoft) <GREEK DERIVATION> To miss the mark as in archery. Hebr. 10 refers to, if we deliberately miss the mark (fail to accept the point of it all) after having been in the truth, there no longer remains any further sacrifice for sin since you seek to recrucify Jesus over and over again. GOD ASKED his angels "who will be a lying spirit for me in the mouth of the Seer?" DOES GOD TEMPT? Paul said not, but… ; Click here: CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Original Sin http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11312a.htm The best way to begin this is with point/counterpoint.
Therefore: Jesus lived to show the mark we should aim for. Jesus died to show how much God cares about us. Jesus rose to show we are forgiven. There is no way in which we can earn salvation. So………….. In his letter to the Church in Rome, Paul speaks of sin (an errant way of life) coming into the world through one, Adam. Paul, then, speaks of salvation coming through one man, Jesus. He expresses how the Way of Adam (self determination of how to live) results in death; but how the Way of Jesus leads us to eternal life. Paul, also, pointed out that God forms us, as a potter does clay, to fulfill His purpose on earth. He MADE Pharaoh obstinate so Moses could demonstrate God’s supremacy. He blinded the Jews till the fullness of the Gentiles could come to understanding. He points out that it is not up to us to complain at how unfair this seems that one should be abased that another is glorified. Calvinists like to make use of this to argue the doctrine of predestination – that God has predetermined who He will accept and who He will reject. This doctrine has been carried to the extreme of teaching individuals have been predestined to be saved or condemned; and that God shows his favor on his chosen by blessing them. Those of us who rise up and assert “this doesn’t make sense,” God responds with, “It’s my ball and I either make the rules or I take the ball home with me.” Hmmm.
Well, I suggest an alternate take on this. What God is doing is neither fair nor unfair but the only way to achieve His purpose. What is askew is our PERCEPTIONS of what God is doing. We tend to think human history is the result of Adam surprising God and
blowing the lid off Paradise. But, that would make God
to be something less than omniscient. It seems more likely that Adam was set up to take the fall much like Pharaohs “sting operation” designed to further the development of righteous character. In fact, in Gal 4:24, Paul compares the Law to the paidagogos – NT:3807 paidagogos (pahee-dag-o-gos'); from NT:3816 and a reduplicated form of NT:71; a boy-leader, i.e. a servant whose office it was to take the children to school. (Biblesoft's New Exhaustive Strong's Numbers and Concordance with Expanded Greek-Hebrew Dictionary. Copyright (c)
How was humanity to learn such a nebulous concept? Hard guidelines are easier to teach and enforce. But, to be like Jesus is to exercise discernment beyond a list of do’s and don’ts. We must, actually, do what Adam thought the forbidden fruit represented – to KNOW good and evil – and make a choice. But, how does one learn the difference? We are, now, developing that kind of discernment every waking moment of our lives. The difference between us and God is that God chooses to know only Good. That’s Sin came into the world by Adam because he made the original choice to know both. Once we truly know and believe in Jesus, we learn to reject evil and choose only good! That is why a true believer does not finger point, does not click the tongue over the weakness of others. When someone thinks themselves beyond the mercy of God, we should be the non-judgmental helping hand to the truth that Jesus already paid the price to forgive them -- that no one is EVER beyond His mercy. Jesus has paid for us all – not just a chosen few. To believe otherwise is to diminish the value of His sacrifice – to say He was not able to bring all to justification. To believe God chose not to bring all to justification flies in the face of His Word and the representation of His Love. To think we have anything what-so-ever to do with salvation is to deceive ourselves as much as thinking we are without sin. Jesus Christ did it ALL for us. Even to providing the faith necessary to perceive the nature of His sin offering. In the letter to the Hebrews (the church at Jerusalem), Paul refers to Jesus as the High Priest who’s one time offering of perfection has eternally negated all other priestly offerings. It is the true gift which keeps on giving. Once we understand this, we are freed from all our personal baggage of guilt. We will still sin, but we are no longer guilty. And, since to God a near miss is as good as a mile, the sacrifice is retroactive to all humanity from the most innocent to the most evil. Of course, for us to gain the personal benefits of such freedom, we have to accept it. Jesus said, “Ye shall know the Truth, and the Truth shall set you free.” Herod, who didn’t know the Truth asked, “What is Truth?” Humanity still asks that question today. Jesus said, “I am the Truth, the Way, and the Life. No one comes to the Father except by Me.” Christianity has taught many things regarding this which generally boil down to “believing the facts of His life, crucifixion, and resurrection.” But, Paul stated Satan and the demons also believe this, so there must be more to it. Christianity often goes on to state there are rules to belief. In this, the Truth comes closer to hand, but is still out of reach. Remember the paidagogos – the slave in who’s custody the noble children where kept to and from their lessons? The real teacher he delivered them to was Jesus. Once they came of age, they had no further use for such rules. Jesus IS the Truth, the Way, the Life. Our lives are to mirror His in a growth experience. We see how He lived. The only finger pointing He ever did was aimed at the religious establishment. He forgave sinners without precondition. He forgave sins even though He had not, yet, been offered up on the cross. Consider that. Sins could be forgiven even prior to the Passover crucifixion and resurrection:
That indicates Jesus might have suffered the crucifixion only to ILLUSTRATE, to our limited vision, God’s love for us. What an awesome sacrifice! Could that be why the humanity within Jesus prayed, that night in Gethsemane, for some other way to do it? Jesus indicated before hand that He was aware of His destiny; yet, on that night, He begged for an alternate possibility. Immediately, He responded with, “But, not my will but Thine be done,” yielding Himself to the process. A process which teaches us to willingly sacrifice ourselves for others -- that, to come to the Father through Jesus, is to understand and inculcate the metaphor of Jesus. That is, after all, what “bearing His cross” represents – crucifying our natural instinct for self-preservation for the sake of those who have yet to believe. Jesus died, not for the righteous, but for the unrighteous:
For the opposite view, study the Parable of the Good Samaritan. Luke 10:25-37.
So, this is how Jesus removes the sin which came through Adam –
by refusing to see it. When we “believe in Jesus,” we follow His example and forgive the sins of others. We, perceiving what Jesus did to show His love toward us, are convicted in our hearts (basic life force) to change our behavior to mirror His. We no longer steal, not because of the possible penalty of the Law, but because we understand the pain such brings to the victim. Like Jesus, we no longer desire to hurt others. We no longer commit adultery because we realize the ultimate pain brought on by such selfish behavior. We no longer commit murder, because that would be contradictory to the whole concept of self-sacrifice. We no longer condemn, because that is contradictory to the whole concept of Jesus. We, in essence, cease to be a threat to the wellbeing of society; but, become instead, The Way to escape from the slavery of fear.
Christianity should not be a political power, but a social alternative; not a controlling force, but a positive example; not a tool of prejudice, but the cure for hate. Of course, this isn’t desirable to “big religion,” because it diminishes their power base. THIS HAS BEEN THE ERROR OF CHRISTIANITY EVER SINCE: We have sought to glorify God in our own way. We have taken of the fruit of the knowledge of Good and Evil rather than letting Jesus teach us the Way of the Good.
This, then, was the meaning of Paul’s message to the Church at Rome – to yield to The Way of Jesus in faith of the ultimate purpose. THIS IS THE MYSTERY OF THE GOSPEL The Mark which is to be the FOCUS of our AIM. Moving On in the Search For UnderstandingReturn to upon further review homepage Wilhoughfw@aol.com |
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